Don’t be fooled: Building your own PC isn’t some arcane art or esoteric skill that only the most hardcore of hardware geeks can pull off. In fact, assembling a DIY PC is pretty straightforward once you’ve settled on your parts list

Rolling your own computer offers a number of advantages that boxed desktops just can’t match. You get granular control over every single aspect of the hardware. You get to choose not only the nuts-and-bolts-level details like processing and graphical capabilities, but also deeply personal touches like the PC’s case design and cooling capabilities.

Want an over-the-top rig with Intel’s fastest-ever processor and a massive dual-GPU graphics card sporting integrated liquid cooling? You won’t find it in a box at a retail store.

Even better, when you’re building your own PC you can shop around for the best price for each of your chosen components, rather than paying a single marked-up cost for the whole-hog system. The superb PCPartPicker.com website makes comparison shopping dead simple. And when you’re done building your PC and successfully power it up, it feels glorious—like you’ve truly accomplished something, rather than simply yanking a prebuilt tower out of a box.

Building a PC for the first time can be intimidating, though.

Even though PC assembly’s fairly simple once you know what you’re doing, staring at a giant pile of disparate parts and knowing you not only need to piece them together correctly but also wire them correctly afterwards is enough to bring a lump to a newbie PC builder’s throat.

We’re here to help.

Loyd Case

The raw components may look like a mess, but turning them into a neat, clean build doesn’t take much extra time at all.

Over the past several months, PCWorld has been publishing detailed installation guides—often with supplementary buying advice—for every major PC component. That gargantuan task is finally over. Now, we’re pulling them all together into this comprehensive superguide that explains how to build your PC from top to bottom, from case fans to CPU to cable management.

Need help installing a particular component? Here’s what you’ll find on each page in this series:

Even veteran PC builders stumble into trouble every now and again (though our guide to avoiding common PC building mistakes should help you avoid most of it). If your system won’t start after it’s all together, check out PCWorld’s guide to troubleshooting your home-built PC. It’s a few years old, but still very applicable today. And once everything’s up and running, consider checking out these 22 free programs that your new PC needs first. They all rock!

Then sit back, relax, and enjoy a cold beverage. You just built a PC with your own two hands. That wasn’t so hard, was it?

This story, "How to build a PC: A step-by-step, comprehensive guide" was originally published by
PCWorld.